Source: UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, RIVERSIDE submitted to NRP
EVALUATION OF THE USDA CORE COWPEA COLLECTION FOR RESISTANCE TO COWPEA APHID AND ROOT-KNOT NEMATODES
Sponsoring Institution
Agricultural Research Service/USDA
Project Status
COMPLETE
Funding Source
Reporting Frequency
Annual
Accession No.
0412295
Grant No.
(N/A)
Cumulative Award Amt.
(N/A)
Proposal No.
(N/A)
Multistate No.
(N/A)
Project Start Date
Aug 14, 2007
Project End Date
Oct 31, 2008
Grant Year
(N/A)
Program Code
[(N/A)]- (N/A)
Recipient Organization
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, RIVERSIDE
(N/A)
RIVERSIDE,CA 92521
Performing Department
NEMATOLOGY
Non Technical Summary
(N/A)
Animal Health Component
100%
Research Effort Categories
Basic
0%
Applied
100%
Developmental
0%
Classification

Knowledge Area (KA)Subject of Investigation (SOI)Field of Science (FOS)Percent
2021620108030%
2021520108020%
2021830108020%
2021419108030%
Goals / Objectives
The objective of this research project is to screen the USDA Cowpea Core Collection for resistance to cowpea aphid in seedling (greenhouse) and naturally infested field tests, and to complete the screening of the USDA cowpea core collection for resistance to Rk-avirulent and Rk-virulent strains of root-knot nematodes.
Project Methods
1) Aphid screening: In seedling screens, two plants of each accession will be established in 1 gal pots filled with sterilized soil mix. Six replicate pots of each accession and of a control susceptible genotype (CB27) will be used. Two-week-old plants will be infested with cowpea aphid larvae, monitored every four days for aphid buildup and plant health, and scored to classify accessions as fully susceptible, moderately susceptible, moderately resistant or highly resistant. In field screens, cowpea accessions will be planted in a replicated trial in single 20 foot rows on 30 inch raised beds with susceptible checks on every third row. Naturally infested cowpea aphid populations will be rated biweekly for resistance five weeks after planting. Intensity of aphid attack and plant health of each accession will be evaluated on a 0-9 scale. 2) Root-knot nematode screening: Two plants of each cowpea accession plus resistant and susceptible checks will be evaluated in a modified growth pouch screening system. Ten-day-old plants in pouches will be inoculated with second-stage root-knot juveniles and after 30 days at 26-27 C, a nematode egg-mass selective dye will be used to stain the egg masses per root system which will be counted to quantify nematode reproduction and classify for resistance. Putative resistant accessions will be re-screened with a minimum of 10 replicate plants per entry with the M. javanica and M. incognita isolates used in the first screen plus additional isolates of M. incognita that express virulence. 3) Data repository: The resistance screening indices from the aphid and nematode screening work will be sent to the USDA in both hard copy and electronically, for entry into the GRIN system database.

Progress 08/14/07 to 10/31/08

Outputs
Progress Report Objectives (from AD-416) The objective of this research project is to screen the USDA Cowpea Core Collection for resistance to cowpea aphid in seedling (greenhouse) and naturally infested field tests, and to complete the screening of the USDA cowpea core collection for resistance to Rk-avirulent and Rk-virulent strains of root-knot nematodes. Approach (from AD-416) 1) Aphid screening: In seedling screens, two plants of each accession will be established in 1 gal pots filled with sterilized soil mix. Six replicate pots of each accession and of a control susceptible genotype (CB27) will be used. Two-week-old plants will be infested with cowpea aphid larvae, monitored every four days for aphid buildup and plant health, and scored to classify accessions as fully susceptible, moderately susceptible, moderately resistant or highly resistant. In field screens, cowpea accessions will be planted in a replicated trial in single 20 foot rows on 30 inch raised beds with susceptible checks on every third row. Naturally infested cowpea aphid populations will be rated biweekly for resistance five weeks after planting. Intensity of aphid attack and plant health of each accession will be evaluated on a 0- 9 scale. 2) Root-knot nematode screening: Two plants of each cowpea accession plus resistant and susceptible checks will be evaluated in a modified growth pouch screening system. Ten-day-old plants in pouches will be inoculated with second-stage root-knot juveniles and after 30 days at 26- 27 C, a nematode egg-mass selective dye will be used to stain the egg masses per root system which will be counted to quantify nematode reproduction and classify for resistance. Putative resistant accessions will be re-screened with a minimum of 10 replicate plants per entry with the M. javanica and M. incognita isolates used in the first screen plus additional isolates of M. incognita that express virulence. 3) Data repository: The resistance screening indices from the aphid and nematode screening work will be sent to the USDA in both hard copy and electronically, for entry into the GRIN system database. Significant Activities that Support Special Target Populations This project is related to Objective 2 of this in-house project: Develop and apply new or improved agronomic/horticultural evaluation procedures, and genetic marker-based approaches for genetic diversity assessment of the preceding genetic resources. The USDA Cowpea Core Collection was screened for resistance to cowpea aphid and root knot-nematodes. The cowpea aphid screening in the field was completed on the full set of cowpea genotypes. Nematode screening for resistance in the field and greenhouse are two-thirds complete and will be completed by the end of October 2008. The Principal Investigator monitored activities within this project via email correspondence with the investigator.

Impacts
(N/A)

Publications